Founder of Startup Weekend and Startup Enthusiast Based in Boulder, Colorado

Twittergate

Some were overly public (TV show script) and harmless while others, such as who has interviewed at the company were overly private (many mortgages could go bust if that was leaked).

Today TechCrunch released a good amount of the documents in an overly tasteful way (really telling the story, putting context and not making anyone look like a complete fool, which could have been done by omitting certain parts of the story).

Interesting. We get to play a little armchair quarterback with the releasing of these.

I’m left with a puzzled feeling after reading the notes. Interesting read, and largely, we must note, without context to who / what /why these were lined up the way they were.

The big question for me is when will be Twitters Friendster moment (users bail!) and is this it.

They have created a product that is more addictive than cigarettes for users (try quitting) but beyond that, really have been uninspiring. The users have been extremely interesting, while the application is buggy, slow and getting loaded with spam. I have just over 8600 ‘followers’ at the time of writing this, but have been followed by over 20,000. That is over 10,000 people that have followed, and then unfollowed once I didn’t follow back. 10,000 emails to my inbox. I’m not going into what causes these behaviors (I tweet a lot) but you can’t deny that spam is a widespread and largely unanswered problem on Twitter.

I am convinced of one thing though, that users don’t ‘tweet.’

They post.

The problem that Twitter solved, if you will stretch a bit, is they made non media producers to media producers. And it is working, although not providing any data on location or context, but people like David’s Mom are avid media producers.

These users that didn’t post are not doing so (outside of the confines of FaceBook or the spam riddled MySpace).

And I can’t help but come to a conclusion that these interesting groups are the biggest story. They are getting used to post.

And post a lot.

And there will be a point when the spam and bugs and drama of twitter will shove them to smaller networks.

Or start their own.

The feeling that I am left with after reading the documents is that no, passionate user, this company is not for you.

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About Andrew Hyde

I’m a vagabond and a minimalist that sold everything but 15 things and went on a big trip (82 countries). My most read and respected blog posts are here. This blog has reached millions with writing about minimalism, startups, design, culture and events.